Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

India proposes electrifyi­ng motorbikes, scooters in 6-8 years

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(New Delhi) REUTERS: The Indian government’s leading think-tank has proposed electrifyi­ng most motorbikes and scooters within the next six to eight years to curb pollution and reduce dependency on fossil fuels, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said.

The draft proposal from Niti Aayog, which is chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and plays a critical role in policy-making, also recommends electrifyi­ng the country’s popular threewheel­ed auto rickshaws, said the source, who declined to be identified as the proposal is not public and still needs the go ahead from the government.

India sold more than 21 million motorbikes and scooters in the year to March 31, making it one of the world’s biggest two-wheeler markets. In the same period, it sold just 3.3 million cars and utility vehicles.

Electric scooters accounted for just a fraction of the total but sales more than doubled to 126,000 in the 12 months, from 54,800 a year earlier, according to the data from the Society of Manufactur­ers of Electric Vehicles.

“We have lagged in electrifyi­ng the car segment. India has decided to take the lead in two-wheelers and three-wheelers,” said the source.

Although exit polls suggest the political alliance led by Modi will win a clear majority in the country’s recent election, final results will only be announced on Thursday.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether the new administra­tion would adopt the electrific­ation proposal.

If the proposal, which is being worked on with the Ministries of Heavy Industries, Road Transport and Power, is approved, it would open up a new market for global companies like Japan’s Yamaha Motor and Suzuki Motor, which are drawing up plans to launch electric two-wheelers in India.

Modi’s government set an ambitious target in 2017 to electrify all new cars and utility vehicles by 2030 but resistance from the auto industry forced it to scale back the plan.

The government now expects electric vehicles to make up 15 percent of all new sales in five years from less than one percent currently.

Efforts to convince car makers to produce electric vehicles have flopped mainly because there is no clear policy to incentivis­e local manufactur­ing and sales, a lack of public charging infrastruc­ture and the high cost of batteries.

The draft proposal goes some way towards rectifying that, offering incentives for the manufactur­e and sale of electric motorbikes and scooters while penalising gasoline models, said the source, adding that the plan will be finalised after input from industry players.

Hero Electric as well as startups Ather Energy, Twenty Two Motors and Okinawa currently sell electric scooters in the country.

India’s cabinet in February approved a scheme to spend US$1.4 billion over three years to subsidise sales of electric and hybrid vehicles.

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